Father  Eldred joins love of Eucharist, 
devotion to Blessed Mother Theodore
      By Sean Gallagher
      
From the time he was a first-grade student at St.  Patrick School  in Terre Haute  in 1955, Father Richard Eldred has had a special devotion to Blessed Mother  Theodore Guérin.
        He grew up in Terre    Haute, not far from Saint Mary-of-the-Woods where  Blessed Mother Theodore founded the Sisters of Providence in 1840. Members of  that religious community taught him both in his parish school and later at Paul Schulte   High School.
        Father Eldred, now pastor of St. Vincent de Paul Parish in Bedford and St. Mary Parish in Mitchell, 
        continued to live and worship in his hometown during his  college years at Indiana State University  and as a young adult working in his family’s business based in Terre Haute.
        So there was always a close connection between him, the  Sisters of Providence and their foundress.
        But this relationship took on a greater depth in 1994 when  Father Eldred was discerning a possible call to the priesthood.
        He had started the application process to become a  seminarian in early July.
        Several weeks later, he received a phone call from Sacred  Heart School of Theology in Hales Corners, Wis.
  “They called me at 11:30 a.m. on Aug. 22, telling me that I  had been accepted, and that they wanted me there that day,” Father Eldred said.  “And that’s when I said, ‘I’ve got a house. I’ve got a business.’ I was caught  off guard.”
        But like Abraham, who responded immediately to God’s call to  leave the land of his fathers for the Promised Land, Father Eldred packed his  bags and left Terre Haute  behind that day, arriving at the seminary at 9 p.m.
        Dropping everything at a moment’s notice to pursue a  different path was a momentous choice for Father Eldred.
        At the time, he was the treasurer of his family’s 
        business that involved five trucking companies, a warehouse  firm and an industrial packaging outfit.
        Four years later, Father Eldred received another phone call  that had another tremendous impact on his life.
  “I can remember sitting in my seminary room and Father  [Joseph] Moriarty [the then archdiocesan vocations director] being there, and  he had received a call at my desk, and then hung up and then the phone rang  again,” Father Eldred said. “And he told me, ‘This is for you.’ And so I took  the call and I won’t forget it. That’s when they said, ‘You’ve been selected to  go to the Vatican  and be the deacon and represent the Sisters of Providence.’ ”
        The religious community had been given the 
        opportunity to invite a deacon from the archdiocese to serve  at Blessed Mother Theodore’s beatification Mass in Rome.
        For Providence Sister Marie Kevin Tighe, vice-postulator of  the canonization cause, the fact that Father Eldred, with his close connection  to her community and their foundress, was the only archdiocesan deacon at the  time was fitting.
  “Well, I thought that was typical of Mother Theodore to  arrange for one of our own young men to be a deacon at that particular moment  in our history,” she said.
        At the actual Mass, Father Eldred was with Pope John Paul II  when he received the offertory gifts. He received the sign of peace and  Communion from the pope and later purified his chalice.
        Serving so close to the pope was a powerful experience for  Father Eldred.
  “Looking back, I didn’t comprehend it,” he said.
        Father Moriarty, now associate director of spiritual  formation at Saint Meinrad School of Theology in St. Meinrad, said the devotion  that Father Eldred had shown to Blessed Mother Theodore throughout his years of  priestly formation was an “excellent example” for his fellow seminarians.
  “I think that [his] trust … in Providence was something that he relied on  and something that he experienced through praying through her intercession,”  said Father Moriarty, who is also administrator of Our Lady of the Springs  Parish in French Lick and Our Lord Jesus Christ the King Parish in Paoli. “I  think he was doing that all along.”
        Father Eldred’s devotion to Blessed Mother Theodore  continued after his ordination to the priesthood in 1999.
        Wherever he has served in the archdiocese—from Richmond to Indianapolis  to Mooresville to Bedford and Mitchell—he has encouraged people to learn from  Mother Theodore’s example, and to pray for her interecession. He has also given  out hundreds of her holy cards that contain third-class relics of Indiana’s first saint.
        But it is at St. Thomas More Parish in Mooresville where  Father Eldred’s devotion to Blessed Mother Theodore has made the largest  impact.
        Shortly after he become 
        administrator there in 2001, he approached parishioners Rose  Warthen and Vi Jerin about “a little job” he had for them, Warthen recalled.
        The parish had been having monthly periods of 
        adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. Father Eldred wanted  them to help establish and coordinate a perpetual adoration chapel.
        Warthen initially wasn’t sold on the idea.
  “When he said we were going to go perpetual, I looked at him  and I do believe I said, ‘You’re nuts,’ ” she said.
        But the chapel, which was named after Blessed Mother  Theodore, was inaugurated just a few months after Father Eldred began his  ministry there. Eucharistic adoration continues there to this day.
        Having the chapel named after Mother Theodore was special  for Warthen, who had “developed a relationship with her” when her husband was  ill in 1995.
        She also assisted Father Eldred in encouraging 
        devotion to Mother Theodore.
  “When Father Rick would get a batch of holy cards with the  third-class relics, I made sure that special people that I came in contact with  or somebody that was hurting [would get them],” she said. “He always encouraged  devotion, first to the Eucharist and then to Mother Theodore.”
        For Father Eldred, encouraging devotion to the Eucharist and  to Blessed Mother Theodore are intimately connected.
  “Her love for the Eucharist is what I’ve always seen as her  true charism,” he said. “When she first arrived here, she and her companions …  never said a word to anybody until after they went before the Eucharist and  prayed. Then after putting their trust in the Lord in the Eucharist, they began  their work.”
        Father Eldred is now looking forward to showing his love for  Blessed Mother Theodore Guérin at the celebration of the Eucharist on Oct. 15  in Rome, where Pope Benedict XVI will declare her a saint.
  “It’s sort of like going back and concluding the long  process that started when I was in the first grade,” he said. “And so from that  standpoint, it’s very exciting.” †